Chapter

 1      XVI|       of embroidery.~ ~She had abandoned her former mode of dress,
 2      XVI|        a response.~ ~“You have abandoned us entirely; I was anxious
 3    XXXII|        Marie-Anne’s departure, abandoned himself to the most frightful
 4     XLII|        she had been disdained, abandoned, and repulsed, she was no
 5    XLIII|       innkeeper over there has abandoned his inn and mysteriously
 6    XLIII| Courtornieu, Chupin would have abandoned his task; and, in spite
 7     XLVI|      punishment. Poor child! I abandoned him to strangers. Wretched
 8     XLIX|     the missing man was almost abandoned, when a shepherd lad, pale
 9        L|       was for her sake that he abandoned me; and never, while she
10     LIII|      to the scaffold, and then abandoned by the executioner, who
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